Refinance Break-Even: How to Evaluate It

Refinancing can lower your monthly payment, but closing costs and fees mean refinancing only makes sense after you recoup those costs. This page shows simple ways to estimate break-even, practical examples, and follow-up steps to decide whether to refinance or use alternative strategies (like rate modification or principal paydown). Use the Refinance Calculator after reading to model your exact numbers.

Quick formula

Break-even months = closing costs ÷ monthly savings

Example

If closing costs are $3,000 and the new mortgage lowers your payment by $200/month, break-even is 15 months. If you expect to stay in the home longer than 15 months, the refinance often makes financial sense.

Next steps

Frequently asked questions

How long should I plan to stay to justify refinancing?

If your break-even is 12 months, plan to stay at least 18–24 months to capture savings after accounting for taxes and potential rate changes.

Do closing costs always make refinancing a poor choice?

Not always. If rates fall enough or you need to change term/type of loan, refinancing can still be beneficial despite closing costs.